Technically, it's very good. Colored pencils? I've seen some amazing work done in that medium. Some artists can finish a piece that looks almost photographic. For me, though, the upside down idea is disconcerting. Maybe close ups of her face and parts of the car, instead. But I find that it bothers my eyes to try and focus on the upside down images and I think when you cause a viewer to work too hard to view your paintings you run the risk of making them turn away. Just my opinion, naturally. The next poster may say it's an amazing idea and don't change a thing. As I said, though, the drawing is very good.

Well maybe the next one. I concur with everything you have said Joseph. Problem with some of us artists is that some of us are to thin skinned to deal with a truthful critique. Some of us even fold up to never post again nor even to display our work. Pity that some of us artists possess extraordinary skills in technique and vision that becomes denied to the world because of our own personal timidity. I do hope this artist is not a member of the group I just spoke about and follows through with the challenge made here.

Well, I certainly hope that he accepts the criticism in the manner in which it was intended. Not to be an ***, but to be helpful. I'm glad you thought the same thing. I actually feel as though I'm going to get a headache if I stare at that upside down image too long.

This is strange. I took the drawing from my studio to the kitchen to look show my wife.She almost instantly got a headache and within a few minutes also had an upset stomach .I am not making this up.What I am trying to do in this drawing is to see how much I can distort perspective using line ,color, and textures. I wanted to see if I could make the viewer unable to focus on either figure for any length of time by having the two figures backgrounds blend.While drawing this it would seem to distort my vision. I am thinking that because of the drawing optical tricks. one may find difficulty focusing on the figures.intellectually you can identify the two figures even though one is inverted.But, the part of your brain that perceives vision can not handle the mixed signals from the inverted drawing that it cause one to feel queasy.I am going to perhaps tone down the contrasts and see if I can keep the drawing from making my wife sick again. I should have it finished tomorrow.

Well, it did kind of make my left eye ache a bit. It is interesting to explore visual acceptable limits, not the social ones, but the physical ones. There are some boundaries that cannot be crossed, such as reversing time. While it is possible mathematically and theoretically, it is not possible in reality. I appreciate your experimenting and pushing boundaries. Look forward to seeing your conceptual adjustments.

OK, now both of my eyes hurt. Never did care much for that Andy Warhol thing. Even if it is varied. I think you have succeeded in creating a visually dissonance work of art. Do you have anything else to post?